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Great
Transitions
Preparing
Adolescents for A New Century
Executive
Summary
Carnegie Corporation of New York is a philanthropic foundation created
by Andrew Carnegie in 1911 to promote the advancement and diffusion
of knowledge and understanding. In June 1986, it established the
Carnegie Council on Adolescent Development to place the challenges
of the adolescent years higher on the nation's agenda. An operating
program of the foundation, the Council builds on the work of many
organizations and individuals to stimulate sustained public attention
to the risks and opportunities of the adolescent years and generates
public and private support for measures that facilitate the critical
transition to adulthood.
Composed of national leaders in education, law, science, health,
religion, business, the media, youth-serving agencies, and government,
the Council has worked within the best tradition of multidisciplinary
and interprofessional cooperation. Through task forces and working
groups, meetings and seminars, commissioned reports, sponsored studies
and other activities, the Council has sought to identify authoritative
information about the nature and scope of adolescent problems. It
has stimulated public discussion that resulted in well-informed
action to foster constructive roles for families, schools, health
agencies, community organizations, and the media in developing competent,
healthy adolescents.
Great
Transitions: Preparing Adolescents for a New Century is the
concluding report of the Council. This pamphlet presents a brief
summary of the main themes and recommendations of the report. Copies
of the full report can be obtained for $10.00 from the Carnegie
Corporation of New York, P.O. Box 753, Waldorf, MD 20604, (800)
998-2269. Bulk rates and complimentary abridged versions are also
available.
TABLE
OF CONTENTS
Adolescence is one of the most fascinating and complex transitions
in the life span: a time of accelerated growth and change second
only to infancy; a time of expanding horizons, self-discovery, and
emerging independence; a time of metamorphosis from childhood to
adulthood. Its beginning is associated with biological, physical,
behavioral, and social transformations that roughly correspond with
the move from elementary school to middle or junior high school.
The events of this crucially formative phase can shape an individual's
life course and thus the future of the whole society.
Early adolescence, encompassing the sexual awakenings of puberty
as well as new social and educational demands, is an age of particular
vulnerability. Barely out of childhood, young people ages ten to
fourteen are today experiencing more freedom, autonomy, and choice
than ever at a time when they still need special nurturing, protection,
and guidance. Without the sustained involvement of parents and other
adults in safeguarding their welfare, young adolescents are at risk
of harming themselves and others.
Many adolescents manage to negotiate their way through this critical
transition with relative success. With caring families, good schools,
and supportive community institutions, they grow up reasonably well
educated, committed to families and friends, and prepared for the
workplace and for the responsibilities of citizenship. Even under
less-than-optimal conditions for growth and development--the absence
of supportive and caring adults, poverty, unsafe schools, and distressed
communities--adolescents can become contributing members of society.
Some achieve this status despite facing threats to their well-being,
such as AIDS and easy access to lethal weapons and drugs, that were
all but unknown to their parents and grandparents.
For many others, however, the obstacles in their path can impair
their physical and emotional health, destroy their motivation and
ability to succeed in school and jobs, and damage their personal
relationships. Many reach adulthood ill-equipped to participate
responsibly in our democratic society.
Across America today, adolescents are confronting pressures to use
alcohol, cigarettes, or other drugs and to have sex at earlier ages.
Many are depressed: about a third of adolescents report they have
contemplated suicide. Others are growing up lacking the competence
to handle interpersonal conflict without resorting to violence.
By age seventeen, about a quarter of all adolescents have engaged
in behaviors that are harmful or dangerous to themselves and others:
getting pregnant, using drugs, taking part in antisocial activity,
and failing in school. Altogether, nearly half of American adolescents
are at high or moderate risk of seriously damaging their life chances.
The damage may be near term and vivid, or it may be delayed, like
a time bomb set in youth.
The social and technological changes of this century, and especially
of recent decades, have provided many young people with remarkable
material benefits and opportunities to master technical skills;
they have also introduced new stresses and risks into the adolescent
experience. Today, with high divorce rates, increases in both parents
working, and the growth of single-parent families, slightly more
than half of all American children will spend at least part of their
childhood or adolescence living with only one parent. In this situation,
exacerbated by the erosion of neighborhood networks and other traditional
social support systems, children now spend significantly less time
in the company of adults than they did a few decades ago; more of
their time is spent in front of the television set or with their
peers in age-segregated, unsupervised environments.
Such conditions occur among families of all income levels and backgrounds
and in cities, suburbs, and rural areas. But they are especially
severe in neighborhoods of concentrated poverty, where young adolescents
are more likely to lack two crucial prerequisites for their healthy
growth and development: a close relationship with a dependable adult
and the perception of meaningful opportunities in mainstream society.
For today's adolescents, particularly those who do not intend to
go beyond high school, there is much less chance to earn a decent
living wage, support a family, and participate actively in the life
of the community and nation than there was a few decades ago. Many
adolescents feel adult-like pressures without experiencing the rewards
of belonging and of being useful in the valued settings of adult
life. Especially in low-income neighborhoods where good education
and jobs are scarce, young people can grow up with a bleak sense
of the future.
===============================
Young
Adolescents Facing Serious Risks
In 1993, approximately 7.3 percent (19 million) of the U.S. population
were young adolescents, ages ten through fourteen. Of these, approximately
20 percent were living below the federal poverty line, which in
1993 was $14,763 for a family of four. Minority adolescents were
disproportionately poor: 43 percent of African American adolescents
and 38 percent of Hispanic/Latino adolescents lived in poverty,
compared with 15 percent of white adolescents. By the year 2000,
more than one-third of all young adolescents will be members of
racial or ethnic minorities: African Americans (16 percent); American
Indian, Eskimo, and Aleut (1 percent), Asian/Pacific Americans
(5 percent), and Hispanic/Latino (14 percent). [1] To compete
in the global economy of the twenty-first century, America will
need all of these young people to be healthy and well educated.
Health
Risks
- Injuries
are the leading cause of death for young adolescents. The
largest single cause of death among these adolescents is injuries
from motor vehicle crashes. [2]
-
-
The
firearm homicide rate for ten- to fourteen-year-olds more
than doubled between 1985 and 1992 (from 0.8 to 1.9 per 100,000).
For black males, the rate increased from 3.0 to 8.4 per 100,000
during the same period. [3]
-
In
1992, twelve- to fifteen-year-olds had a high overall victimization
rate. They were victims of assault more than any other age
group. [4]
-
In
a national representative sample of adolescents ten to sixteen
years old, one-fourth of respondents reported having experienced
an assault or abuse in the previous year. [5] Approximately
20 percent of the documented child abuse and neglect cases
in 1992 involved young adolescents between the ages of ten
and thirteen years. [6]
-
Use
of alcohol and cigarettes remains more widespread than use
of illegal drugs.
-
Although
it is illegal to sell alcohol to individuals under twenty-one
years of age, two-thirds of eighth graders report that they
have already tried alcohol and a quarter say that they are
current drinkers. Twenty-eight percent of eighth graders claim
that they have been drunk at least once. [7]
-
Among
eighth graders, who are thirteen to fourteen years old, the
rate of current smoking (smoking any cigarette in the past
thirty days) rose by 30 percent between 1991 and 1994, from
14.3 to 18.6 percent. [8]
-
Marijuana
use among eighth graders more than doubled between 1991 and
1994, from 6.2 to 13.0 percent. [9]
-
Over
the last three decades, the age of first intercourse has declined.
Higher proportions of adolescent women and men reported being
sexually experienced at each age between the ages of fifteen
and twenty in 1988 than in the early 1970s. In 1988, 27 percent
of girls and 33 percent of boys had intercourse by their fifteenth
birthday. [10]
-
While
the number of births of those ages fifteen and younger is
not large, this group is experiencing the greatest rate of
increased births. Pregnancy rates of all girls less than fifteen
years old rose 4.1 percent in the United States during the
period between 1980 and 1988 -- higher than any other teenage
group. [11]
-
Current
evidence indicates that increases in depressive disorders
and mood swings are greater for girls than for boys during
adolescence. By age fourteen to fifteen, girls are twice as
likely as boys to suffer from depression, a gender difference
that persists into adulthood.
-
From
1980 to 1992, the rate of suicide among young adolescents
increased 120 percent, and increased most dramatically among
young black males (300 percent) and young white females (233
percent). Suicide rates for ten- to fourteen-year-old American
Indians are four times higher than those for ten- to fourteen-year-olds
of all races. [12]
Educational
Risks
- The
average proficiency in science, mathematics, and writing among
thirteen-year-olds was slightly higher in 1992 than it was
in the 1970s. However, these achievements have not improved
enough to keep pace with the higher level of skills required
in a global economy. [13]
-
-
Only
28 percent of eighth graders scored at or above the proficiency
level in reading in 1994. Two percent read at or above an
advanced level. [14]
-
In
1990, 7 percent of the eighth-grade class of 1988 (most of
whom were then fifteen and sixteen years old) were dropouts.
[15] By their senior year (1992), 12 percent of this class
were dropouts. [16] Dropout rates vary by students' race/ethnicity:
white (9.4); black (14.5); Hispanic (18.3); Asian/Pacific
Islanders (7.0); and American Indian (25.4). [17]
SOURCES
1. Day, J.C. (1993). Population projections of the United States
by age, sex, race, and Hispanic origin: 1993-2050. U.S. Bureau
of the Census, Current Population Reports. Washington, DC: U.S.
Government Printing Office.
2. National Center for Health Statistics, Unpublished Data, 1994.
3. Ibid.
4. Bureau of Justice Statistics. 1994. Criminal victimization
in the United States, 1992. NCJ-145125. Washington, DC: U.S. Government
Printing Office.
5. Finkelhor, D., & Dziuba-Leatherman, J. (1994). Children
as victims of violence: A national survey. Pediatrics, 94,
413-420.
6. U.S. Bureau of the Census. (1994). Statistical abstract of
the United States, 1994 (114th edition). Washington, DC: U.S.
Government Printing Office.
7. Johnston, L.D., O'Malley, P.M., & Bachman, J.G. (1994).
National survey results on drug use from the monitoring the
future study, 1975-1993, volume I, secondary school students.
Rockville, MD: National Institute on Drug Abuse.
8. Johnston, L.D., O'Malley, P.M., & Bachman, J.G. (1995).
National survey results on drug use from the monitoring the
future study, 1975-1994. Rockville, MD: National Institute
on Drug Abuse.
9. Johnston, L.D., O'Malley, P.M., & Bachman, J.G., 1994.
10. The Alan Guttmacher Institute. (1994). Sex and America's
teenagers. New York: Author.
11. U.S. General Accounting Office. (1995). Welfare dependency:
Coordinated community efforts can better serve young at-risk teen
girls. GAO/HEHS/RCED-95-108. Washington, DC: Author.
12. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report. Suicide among
children, adolescents, and young adults -- United States, 1980-1992.
Vol. 44, No. 15, April 21, 1995; and U.S. Congress, Office of
Technology Assessment. (1990). Indian adolescent mental health
(OTA-H-446). Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office.
13. U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education
Statistics, "1994 NAEP reading: A first look." April
1995.
14. Ibid.
15. They were not enrolled in school and had not finished high
school.
16. U.S. Department of Education, 1995.
17. National Center for Education Statistics. (1994). The condition
of education, 1994. NCES94-149. Washington, DC: U.S. Government
Printing Office.
===============================
In the face of the social and economic transformations of the late
twentieth century, all adolescents have enduring human needs that
must be met if they are to grow up to be healthy, constructive adults.
All must:
- Find
a valued place in a constructive group
- Feel
a sense of worth as a person
- Achieve
a reliable basis for making informed choices
- Know
how to use the support systems available to them
- Express
constructive curiosity and exploratory behavior
- Believe
in a promising future with real opportunities
- Find
ways of being useful to others
Meeting these requirements has been essential for human survival
into adulthood for millennia. But in a technologically advanced
democratic society--one that places an increasingly high premium
on competence in many domains--adolescents themselves face a further
set of challenges. They must:
- Master
social skills, including the ability to manage conflict peacefully
- Cultivate
the inquiring and problem-solving habits of mind for lifelong
learning
- Acquire
the technical and analytic capabilities to participate in a
world-class economy
- Become
ethical persons
- Learn
the requirements of responsible citizenship
- Respect
diversity in our pluralistic society
Adolescence is the last phase of the life span in which social institutions
have reasonably ready access to the entire population, so the potential
for constructive influence and for improving adolescents' life chances
is great. Early adolescence--the phase during which young people
are just beginning to engage in very risky behaviors, but before
damaging patterns have become firmly established--offers an excellent
opportunity for intervention to prevent later casualties and promote
successful adult lives.
The American institutions that have the greatest influence on young
adolescents are primarily the family and the schools, but also youth-serving
and health-care organizations and the media. The Carnegie Council
on Adolescent Development urges these five institutions to adapt
to the impact of a hyper-modern, high-tech, pluralistic society
in ways that meet the essential requirements for healthy adolescent
development. These institutions have fallen behind in their vital
functions and must now be strengthened in their respective roles
and linked in a mutually reinforcing system of support for adolescents.
Many current interventions on behalf of young adolescents are targeted
to one problem behavior, such as drug abuse or teenage pregnancy.
While targeted approaches can be useful, they often do not take
adequate account of two important findings from research: (1) serious
problem behaviors tend to cluster in the same individual and reinforce
one another; and (2) such behaviors often have common antecedents
in childhood experience and educational failure. The other side
of the coin is that those who engage in healthy lifestyles are more
likely to do well in school and to come from supportive family and
community structures that reward their effort and promote self-respect
and decent human relations. These observations suggest that families,
schools, and other social institutions have a special opportunity--and
obligation--to foster healthy lifestyles in childhood and adolescence,
taking into consideration the underlying factors that promote either
positive or negative outcomes.
The Carnegie Council focuses on approaches that deal with the factors
that predispose adolescents to engage in high-risk or problem behaviors.
These are generic in nature; they are distinguished from categorical
or targeted approaches that focus on single problems, often after
they have already occurred. Generic approaches focus on the positive
possibilities inherent in the adolescent transition--possibilities
for educating and motivating young adolescents in the pursuit of
healthy lifestyles, for fostering interpersonal and decision-making
skills to help them choose alternatives to very risky behavior,
and for providing them with reasons and tools to build constructive
lives.
Generic approaches that can be adopted by the pivotal institutions
include not only strong family relationships and excellent basic
education but also a variety of related approaches such as social
support networks, adult mentoring, health promotion programs incorporating
human biology, peer-mediated services, and life-skills training
to help young people cope with day-to-day living. If sustained over
a period of years, such interventions can offset the negative effects
of low self-respect, undeveloped social and decision-making skills,
indifference to education, lack of information about health matters,
low perception of opportunities, and limited incentives for delaying
short-term gratification.
Ensuring the healthy growth and development of adolescents must
involve the commitment of all institutions that have a profound
impact on youth. No single influence can be responsible for the
successful transition from adolescence into adulthood. Families,
the schools, the health sector, community organizations, and the
media must work singly and in concert to launch all young people
on a successful life course. In the twenty-first century, every
young person will be essential; no individual will be expendable
if our country is to maintain a dynamic, civil society and a flourishing
economy in the face of accelerating technological, demographic,
and socioeconomic change. The following recommendations of the Carnegie
Council offer ways to adapt to the transforming world and provide
life chances for adolescents conducive to a better future for the
entire society.
Reengage
Families with their Adolescent Children
Parental involvement in school activities declines steadily as children
progress to middle and high school. Parents need to remain actively
engaged in their adolescents' education; schools, for their part,
should welcome the families of students as allies and cultivate
their support. Schools and other community institutions, including
healthcare agencies, can help parents deal with the adolescent transition.
They can create parent support groups, parent education programs,
and education for prospective parents. Employers, both public and
private, can pursue more family-friendly policies for parents with
young adolescents. Examples are flexible work hours and other measures
allowing parents to spend more time with their young adolescents
or volunteer in school or youth programs. Under special circumstances,
child care tax credits could be extended to parents of young adolescents
so they may be enrolled in high-quality after-school programs supervised
by responsible, caring adults.
Create
Developmentally Appropriate Schools for Adolescents
States and school districts should give teachers and principals
the authority and resources to transform middle schools and junior
high schools into health-promoting as well as learning environments--environments
that are small-scale and safe, that promote stable relationships
between students and their teachers and peers, that are intellectually
stimulating, that employ cooperative learning strategies and de-emphasize
tracking, that provide health education and life-skills training,
and that offer primary health-care services either in or near the
school. Schools that are developmentally appropriate provide a core
curriculum and teaching methods that excite students' curiosity
and build on their desire to explore, strengthen their analytical
and problem-solving abilities, and provide an understanding of human
biology and its place in the world.
Develop
Health-Promotion Strategies for Young Adolescents
Poor health interferes with learning; good health facilitates it.
Since 1960, the burden of adolescent illness has shifted from the
traditional causes of disease to the more behavior-related problems,
such as sexually transmitted diseases, teenage pregnancy, motor
vehicle accidents, gun-related homicides and accidents, depression
leading to suicide, and abuse of drugs (alcohol and cigarettes as
well as illegal drugs). Instilling in adolescents the knowledge,
skills, and values that foster physical and mental health will require
substantial changes in the way health professionals work and the
way they connect with families, schools, and community organizations.
It will also require filling serious gaps in health services for
adolescents. At least three measures are needed to meet these goals.
The first is the training and availability of health providers with
a deep and sensitive understanding of the developmental needs and
behavior-related problems of adolescents. The second is expanded
health insurance coverage for adolescents who now experience barriers
to these services. The third is increasing school-based and school-related
health facilities for adolescents. Taken together, these measures
could significantly improve the health outcomes of adolescents.
Strengthen
Communities with Young Adolescents
Communities should provide more attractive, safe, growth-promoting
settings for young adolescents during the out-of school hours--times
of high risk when parents are often not available to supervise their
children. More than 17,000 national and local youth organizations,
including those sponsored by religious groups, now operate in the
United States, but they do not adequately provide opportunities
for about one-third of young people who most need their support
and guidance. These organizations must now work to expand their
reach, enlisting the help of community residents, families, schools,
volunteers, and adolescents themselves in offering more activities
that convey information about life, careers, and places beyond the
neighborhood--as well as engage them in community service and other
constructive activities.
Promote
the Constructive Potential of the Media
An ever-expanding array of media bombard adolescents with messages
that powerfully shape their attitudes and behavior. Growing, serious
criticism has been directed at television, music media, and video
games for their emphasis on violence as the ultimate problem solver
and on unrestrained sexuality. The undeniable power of the media
could be used far more constructively in the lives of young adolescents.
Families, schools, and other pivotal institutions can help young
people become more "media literate" so they can examine
media messages more critically. They can work with media organizations
in developing health-promoting programming and media campaigns for
youth. And they can support social actions that discourage the media
from glamorizing violence and sex as well as drinking, smoking,
and other drug use.
Business, universities, scientific and professional organizations,
and government at all levels can help pivotal institutions meet
the essential requirements of healthy adolescent development.
Business
The business community can help directly, by providing funds and
technical support to implement the recommendations of this report,
and indirectly, by mobilizing community leadership on behalf of
the education and health of youth. Within the workplace, it can
institute family-friendly policies and practices, and it can cooperate
in diminishing the production of sex- and violence-saturated media
programming.
Universities
and Scientific and Professional Organizations
These "science-rich" institutions and organizations can
stimulate interdisciplinary research and publication on the problems
and opportunities of adolescent development, recognizing the implications
for practice, policy, and social action and bringing the facts before
the public by taking education beyond the campus.
Government
Government at all levels can recognize the critical adolescent years,
particularly early adolescence, in its policies and programs and
assist communities in translating youth-oriented programs into action.
One example is the recent creation of an Office of Adolescent Health
in the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. That effort,
so far, is rudimentary, but it could become a vital focus for healthy
adolescent development. Fifteen states are supporting major reforms
of middle and junior high schools to make them more developmentally
appropriate for young adolescents. More states need to join this
movement. Cities and counties can also organize effectively for
youth development.
With a combination of informed community leadership and vigorous
grass-roots organizing, communities can be mobilized to engage in
a strategic planning process on behalf of adolescents and their
families, similar to what many communities are today doing to promote
a healthy start for newborns. This process can be led by community
councils for youth composed of relevant professionals, business
and media leaders, local youth organizations, parents, and adolescents
themselves. Such councils carefully assess local needs, formulate
useful interventions, and inform the entire community about the
problems and opportunities of adolescence. Experience thus far has
shown that community mobilization is not readily accomplished, but
recent constructive examples provide useful guidance.
Much of the current spending for adolescence could achieve better
results if it were redirected toward fundamental, comprehensive
approaches. Preventing much of the damage now occurring would have
a powerful social and economic impact, including higher productivity,
lowered health costs, lowered prison costs, and improved human welfare.
In the long run, the vitality of any society and its prospects for
the future depend on the quality of its people--on their knowledge
and skill, and on the health and the decency of their human relations.
In an era when there is much well-founded concern about losing a
vital sense of community, these initiatives on behalf of all our
children can have profound collateral benefits of building solidarity,
mutual aid, civility, and a reasonable basis for hope.
A key lesson learned from the Council's experience is the importance
of serious, careful examination of the facts, nonpartisan analyses,
broad dissemination with involvement of key sectors, and sustained
commitment over a period of years. Above all, a long-term view is
essential to bring about the difficult, indeed fundamental, changes
necessary in modern society to improve the life chances of all our
children.
Chair
David A. Hamburg
President
Carnegie Corporation of New York
New York, New York
H. Keith H. Brodie
President Emeritus
Duke University
Durham, North Carolina
Michael I. Cohen
Chairman
Department of Pediatrics
Albert Einstein College of Medicine
New York, New York
Alonzo Crim
Professor
Department of Education
Spelman College
Atlanta, Georgia
Michael S. Dukakis
Visiting Distinguished Professor
Department of Political Science
Northeastern University
Boston, Massachusetts
William H. Gray III
President
United Negro College Fund
Fairfax, Virginia
Beatrix A. Hamburg
President
William T. Grant Foundation
New York, New York
David E. Hayes-Bautista
Director
Center for the Study of Latino Health
University of California at Los Angeles
Fred M. Hechinger
Senior Advisor
Carnegie Corporation of New York
New York, New York
David W. Hornbeck
Superintendent
School District of Philadelphia
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Daniel K. Inouye
United States Senator
Hawaii
James M. Jeffords
United States Senator
Vermont
Richard Jessor
Director
Institute of Behavioral Science
University of Colorado at Boulder
Helene L. Kaplan
Of Counsel
Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher, & Flom
New York, New York
Nancy L. Kassebaum
United States Senator
Kansas
Thomas H. Kean
President
Drew University
Madison, New Jersey
Ted Koppel
ABC News Nightline
Washington, D.C.
Hernan LaFontaine
Professor of Administration and Supervision
Graduate School of Education
Southern Connecticut State University
New Haven, Connecticut
Eleanor E. Maccoby
Barbara Kimball Browning Professor of Psychology, Emerita
Stanford University
Stanford, California
Ray Marshall
Audre and Bernard Rapoport Centennial Chair in Economics and Public
Affairs
Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs
University of Texas at Austin
Julius B. Richmond
John D. MacArthur Professor of Health Policy, Emeritus
Harvard Medical School
Boston, Massachusetts
Frederick C. Robbins
University Professor, Emeritus
Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics
Case Western Reserve University
Cleveland, Ohio
Kenneth B. Smith
President
Chicago Theological Seminary
Chicago, Illinois
Wilma S. Tisch
President Emeritus
WNYC Foundation
New York, New York
P. Roy Vagelos
Former Chair and Chief Executive Officer
Merck, Inc.
Whitehouse Station, New Jersey
James D. Watkins
Admiral, U.S. Navy (Retired)
President
Consortium for Oceanographic Research and Education
Washington, D.C.
William Julius Wilson
Lucy Flower University Professor of Sociology and Public Policy
University of Chicago
Chicago, Illinois
Staff
Ruby Takanishi
Executive Director
Allyn M. Mortimer
Program Associate
Katharine Beckman
Office Administrator
Julia C. Chill
Program/Administrative Assistant
Timothy J. McGourthy
Program/Administrative Assistant
Wanda M. Ellison
Administrative Assistant
Jennifer Hartnett
Staff Assistant
Elliott Milhollin
Office Clerk
Former
Staff
Winnie Bayard
Project Assistant, 1990-93
Bronna Clark
Administrative Secretary, 1986-89
Annette Dryer
Administrative Assistant, 1988-91
Anthony W. Jackson
Project Director
Task Force on Education of Young Adolescents, 1987-90
Susan G. Millstein
Associate Director, 1987-90
Elena O. Nightingale
Senior Advisor to the Council, 1986-94
Jane Quinn
Project Director
Task Force on Youth Development and Community Programs, 1990-93
Linda L. Schoff
Program/Administrative Assistant, 1991-94
Andrea Solarz
Program Associate, 1988-90
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